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Microplastics impair amphibian survival, body condition and function

Chemosphere 2019 121 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jaime Bosch, Alberto Alonso, Naiara López‐Rojo, Luz Boyero Naiara López‐Rojo, Luz Boyero Francisco Correa‐Araneda, Javier Pérez, Alberto Alonso, Jaime Bosch, Javier Pérez, Javier Pérez, Naiara López‐Rojo, Alberto Alonso, Javier Pérez, Luz Boyero Luz Boyero Jaime Bosch, Naiara López‐Rojo, Jaime Bosch, Alberto Alonso, Alberto Alonso, Javier Pérez, Francisco Correa‐Araneda, Alberto Alonso, Luz Boyero Luz Boyero Luz Boyero Francisco Correa‐Araneda, Javier Pérez, Luz Boyero Luz Boyero

Summary

Tadpoles of the common midwife toad were exposed to polystyrene microspheres at varying concentrations in microcosms, with microplastics reducing feeding, impairing body condition, and showing dose-dependent ingestion of particles. The study provides rare evidence that microplastics harm amphibians, a group already facing global population declines.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) are contaminants of increasing concern; they are abundant, ubiquitous and persistent over time, representing potential risks for organisms and ecosystems. However, such risks are still virtually unknown for amphibians, despite the particular attention that these organisms often receive because of their global decline. We examined the effects of MPs (fluorescent, 10-μm polystyrene microspheres) at different concentrations (from 0 to 10 particles mL) on tadpoles of the common midwife toad, Alytes obstetricans, using a microcosm experiment. We assessed MP effects on tadpole feeding, growth and body condition, as well as their ingestion and egestion of MPs (estimated through fluorescence). Additionally, we explored whether MPs became attached to periphyton (the main food source for these tadpoles, thus potentially representing a major way of MP ingestion), and the effect of MPs on periphyton growth (which may translate into altered freshwater ecosystem functioning). Our results showed significant effects on all the examined variables, and caused tadpole mortality at the highest concentration; also, fluorescence indicated the presence of MPs in tadpoles, tadpole faeces and periphyton. This suggests that MPs can be an important source of stress for amphibians in addition to other pollutants, climate change, habitat loss or chytrid infections, and that amphibians can be a major transfer path for MPs from freshwater to terrestrial ecosystems.

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